Showing posts with label words. Show all posts
Showing posts with label words. Show all posts

11.02.2010

key west: host to my most favorite ghost



In Key West, the sun is a blaze of fire burning coal into the teeth of the locals, and flames into the hearts of the sailors. Beautiful fairy-like boys ride around taxi-like bicycles, wanting to tote around lobster-like faces of people from lands where the sun is not a blaze of fire, but a puddle of melted ice.


Their fluttering eyes linger on me like the soft wings of butterflies, as I walk faster and faster to the heart of Duval. In the streets, there are signs for ice cream made by tired, burning hands and cigars are hanging off tattered lips, as they puff the smoke of this forgotten tropical paradise into faltering pink skies.


The old men all look like Hemingway- but that is probably because they hear his ghost sometimes, creaking through their kitchens as they snack at a voracious pace on key-lime pie (for fear that he will ask for a slice.) If I had a lock of sorts, hanging on the door to my regrets, Ernest knows, I too would choose this Key to click it open.


Down at Mile Zero, the whole US of Fucking A breathes down my young and fragile neck. The sun is a blaze of fire again, but somewhere far away from here- we feel the last ray of life before all turns black and full of ghastly possibilities.

Jack and his four seagulls take a nap, their back turned to the spectacle
- the blaze of fire having burnt out all remnants of their Key West illusions long ago.
But not I.

I stand there for a while perplexed, with what some would call a half-crescent rising to my lips; wondering: Why couldn't I write things in a more simple form?
Perhaps like Hemingway when he described a fish or bull.
The sun drowns somewhere below our feet and I leave this non-existing mile, this door, this Key to nowhere- I cannot escape the fact that I am more complex than it will ever be.

9.10.2010

wor(l)dliness

I like words.
I like shaping words. I like controlling them.
I like putting that word in front of that one, because it will sound prettier or perhaps more severe.
I like words the way some may like numbers. I can add them up or divide them, make them adhere to any equation I want.
I like letters the way some may like colors. I can't really explain it, but 'a' could be green and 'b' blue, and then I know where to place them according to their separate hue.
Some say they would rather use bricks to construct- I prefer to use syllables. I don't doubt the power of clay, nor wood, nor metal - but I cannot pretend to believe that words are not more likely to stand the test of time.
Surely, words will last longer than any tangible thing?
A word pyramid will not be affected by the constant wear of wind and rain. A word pyramid is sturdy, will not budge, will not fall underneath the rubble natural phenomenons can so unexpectedly create.
Paragraphs are like endurable shelters for what men have deemed most important to protect.
Only men have the power to create and destroy words, and then, to destroy them is much harder than to build them up. The same could not be said about things: this is not true of buildings; nor sculptures or paintings- but with words, I would find it most true; wouldn't you?



All that said, I do appreciate a good picture.













"I have a rendez-vous with Death
At some disputed barricade"
SEEGER









OLB.